Fan blade with embrittled tip

ABSTRACT

An aircraft turbojet including a fan having a hub driven by a shaft carried by at least one bearing connected to the structure of the turbojet by a bearing support that includes an interposed decoupling device. The hub carries at its periphery a plurality of blades that move inside a retention casing with radial clearance E between the tips of the blades and an inside wall of the retention casing. The inside wall is lined in a layer of abradable material suitable for being planed away by the tips of the rotating blades. The tips of the blades are suitable for being disintegrated by the inside wall of the retention casing in the event of an impact following the appearance of unbalance that has led to the bearing being decoupled, to obtain a clearance J&gt;E as required for operation of the decoupler.

The invention relates to a turbine engine for an aircraft, which engine is suitable for being maintained in operation in a degraded mode after the appearance of accidental unbalance on a rotor, e.g. due to a fan blade breaking under impact from a foreign body.

The invention relates more particularly to an aircraft turbojet including a fan having a hub driven by a shaft carried by at least one bearing connected to the structure of the turbojet by a bearing support that includes an interposed decoupling device, said hub carrying at its periphery a plurality of blades that move inside a retention casing with radial clearance E between the tips of said blades and the inside wall of said retention casing, said inside wall being lined in a layer of abradable material suitable for being planed away by the tips of the rotating blades.

The state of the art is illustrated by FR 2 749 883. In that document, the decoupling device is constituted by breakable links, and the radial clearance E between the tips of the blades and the inside wall of the casing is defined to be large enough to ensure that the rotor is always guided in rotation by the bearing after the breakable elements have broken and does not come into contact with the casing, at least for normal speeds of rotation of the turbine engine under flying conditions and for a pre-established degree of damage, in order to ensure that the tips of the blades do not rub against the retaining casing, since that would lead to a risk of fire and would shift the resonant mode of the rotor towards high speeds of rotation.

Because the abradable material is relatively thick, and because, for aerodynamic reasons, the inside face of the abradable material is in line with the air inlet and outlet sections of the fan, the shape of the retaining casing is relatively complex, leading to manufacturing costs and to an increase in weight and in size.

The object of the invention is to propose a turbojet as defined in the introduction in which the clearance needed for operation of the decoupler is greater than the thickness of the layer of abradable material.

The invention achieves its object by the fact that the tips of the blades are suitable for being disintegrated by the inside wall of the retention casing in the event of an impact following the appearance of unbalance that has led to the bearing being decoupled, so as to obtain clearance J>E as required for operation of the decoupler.

Advantageously, the blades present, close to their tips, respective zones of weakness that are strong enough to enable the tips of said blades to plane away the abradable material of the retention casing, and weak enough to break on the appearance of violent contact between the tips of said blades and the inside wall of the retention casing.

Thus, the clearance needed for operation of the decoupler is obtained not only by disintegration of the abradable material of the retention casing, but also and above all by disintegration of the tips of at least some of the blades of the fan.

The thickness of the abradable material can thus be greatly reduced, thereby simplifying the shape of the retention casing, reducing its weight, and reducing manufacturing costs.

It should also be observed that, because of the unbalance, the tips are caused to disintegrate mainly on those blades that are located in the region opposite from the damaged blade. As a result the unbalance is reduced following disintegration of the blade tips.

Advantageously, the zone of weakness is constituted by a groove formed parallel to the tip in one of the faces of each blade in the base material constituting said blade, said groove being filled with resin so as to provide aerodynamic continuity for said face.

The presence of this groove filled with resin also makes it possible to reduce the weight of the blade in the event of breakage.

The depth of the groove is determined in such a manner that the remaining wall is thin and strong enough to enable the abradable material to be planed while being sufficiently fragile to break in the event of the blade tip impacting against the inside wall of the retention casing.

The groove is preferably formed in the suction side face of the blade.

Preferably, the inside wall of the retention casing presents substantially axial ribs, forming a rasp, so as to facilitate disintegration of the tips of the blades in the event of unbalance and after the abradable material has been abraded away by the tips of the blades. This rasp also presents the advantage of retaining the abradable material better.

Other advantages and characteristics of the invention will appear on reading the following description given by way of example and made with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIG. 1 is an axial half-section through the tip of a fan blade in the vicinity of the retention casing in a prior art turbojet without a decoupler;

FIG. 2 is an axial half-section through the tip of a fan blade in the vicinity of the retention casing in a prior art turbojet with a decoupler;

FIG. 3 shows the end of a fan blade and the adjacent portion of the retention casing in a turbojet of the invention;

FIG. 4 is a section view on line IV-IV of FIG. 3;

FIG. 5 is a lateral section on the suction side through the end of the blade of the invention, on line V-V of FIG. 7;

FIG. 6 is an axial section on line VI-VI of FIG. 5; and

FIG. 7 is a circumferential section through the zone of weakness at the end of the blade, the section being on line VII-VII of FIG. 5.

FIGS. 1 and 2 show the radially outer portion of a fan blade 1 of a double-flow turbojet, with the tip 2 of the blade coming close to the inside wall 3 of a retention casing 4 surrounding the fan.

The annular cylindrical portion 5 of the inside wall 3 situated facing the tips 2 of the blade 1 is covered in a layer 6 of abradable material whose inside wall 7 is planed away by the tips of the blade 1 when the fan first rotates, this wall 7 nevertheless remaining approximately in line with the inside wall 3 of the retention casing 4.

Reference E designates the clearance between the tips 2 of the blades 1 and the inside wall 5 of the retention casing 4, this clearance E being occupied in normal operation of the turbojet by the layer 6 of abradable material.

The layer 6 of abradable material performs two essential roles. Firstly, during normal operation of the turbojet, i.e. in the absence of any accidental unbalance of the fan, the gap between the tips 2 of the blades 1 and the inside wall 7 of the layer 6 of abradable material, as obtained by the planing effect, is kept down to a minimum, thereby avoiding leaks through this gap and thus not degrading the efficiency of the fan.

The second role of the layer 6 is to make a degraded mode of operation possible after the appearance of an accidental unbalance, due to a blade breaking, thereby causing the axis of the rotating fan to be shifted radially through a distance D away from its original position. This displacement D leads to the tips 2 of the intact blades planing away the layer 6 of abradable material.

The thickness E of the abradable material is determined as a function of the displacement D that is calculated for a predetermined amount of damage to a blade 1, said displacement D being a function of the stiffness of the bearing supports carrying the shaft that drives the hub of the fan.

It can be seen that the clearance E shown in FIG. 1 is considerably smaller than the clearance E shown in FIG. 2. FIG. 1 applies to a conventional turbojet without a decoupler, i.e. in which the shaft bearing is always rigidly secured to the structure of the stator.

In contrast, FIG. 2 relates to a turbojet including a decoupler, i.e. the bearing support is connected to the structure via a decoupling device that includes, for example, breakable fasteners that break on the appearance of unbalance, thereby reducing the stiffness of the bearing. The geometrical axis of the fan is then shifted by a distance D from the new axis of rotation of the fan, where said distance D is greater than the corresponding distance obtained for the same reasons in a turbojet without a decoupler. That is why the radial clearance E between the tips 2 of the blades 1 and the inside wall 5 of the casing 4 is greater in the example shown in FIG. 2 than in the example shown in FIG. 1.

The invention relates to a turbojet with a decoupler.

As shown in FIGS. 3 to 7, the tips 2 of the blades 1 of the fan of a turbojet with a decoupler of the invention comes close to the inside wall 3 of the retention casing 4 surrounding the fan. The cylindrical annular portion 5 of the inside wall 3 situated in register with the tips 2 of the blades 1 is covered in a layer 6 of abradable material whose inside wall 7 is planed away by the tips 2 of the blades on first rotation of the fan, said wall 7 remaining approximately in line with the inside wall 3 of the retention casing 4.

As can be seen in FIG. 3, the thickness E of the abradable coating is substantially equal to the thickness shown in FIG. 1 which applies to a conventional turbojet without a decoupler, and it is insufficient to allow a decoupler to operate in the event of accidental unbalance.

In order to obtain the clearance J>E that is required for degraded operation of the turbojet in the event of accidental unbalance, the invention provides for the tips 2 of the blades 1 to be capable of being disintegrated by the inside wall 5 of the casing 4 once the layer 6 of abradable material has been planed away completely due to the appearance of accidental unbalance causing the bearing carrying the drive shaft of the hub 8 of the fan 9 to become decoupled.

For this purpose, and as shown in FIGS. 5 to 7, each blade 1 presents in the vicinity of its tip 2 a zone of weakness 10 that is made by means of a groove 11 extending parallel to its tip 2 in the suction side face 12 of the blade. This groove 11 is filled with resin 13 which ensures aerodynamic continuity for the suction side face 12 in the vicinity of the tip 2. The groove 11 is made in the base material of the blade 1 to a depth such that the remaining wall thickness of base material in the zone of weakness beside the leading edge 14, the pressure side face 15, and the trailing edge 16 is of sufficient strength to be capable of planing away the layer 6 of abradable material while being sufficiently weak to break in the event of an impact occurring between the tip 2 of the blade and the inside wall 5 of the retention casing 4.

As shown in FIG. 4, the inside wall 5 of the retention casing 4 presents a plurality of substantially axial ribs 17 that form a rasp, thereby making it easier to break the zones of weakness 10 in the event of unbalance once the abradable material has been completely abraded away.

In FIG. 3, the thickness of the abradable layer 6 is referenced E and the clearance obtained by disintegration of the blade tips is referenced J. The clearance E is preferably less than one-third of the clearance J.

Since, by virtue of the invention, the thickness E of the abradable material can be relatively thin, the shape of the retention casing is simplified, as are its weight and its size in register with the fan.

The resin 13 is torn away from the blade after the zone of weakness breaks, thereby enabling the weight of the blade 1 to be reduced in the event of its tip 2 disintegrating.

In operation, the disintegrated tips 2 belong to the blades 1 that are disposed on the hub 8 on the side opposite from the broken blade that gave rise to the accidental unbalance. As a result, after these tips have disintegrated, the center of gravity of the fan moves back towards its geometrical axis, thereby reducing the unbalance. 

1-6. (canceled)
 7. An aircraft turbojet comprising: a fan having a hub driven by a shaft carried by at least one bearing connected to a structure of the turbojet by a bearing support that includes an interposed decoupling device, the hub carrying at its periphery a plurality of blades that move inside a retention casing with a radial clearance E between tips of the blades and an inside wall of the retention casing, the inside wall being lined in a layer of abradable material configured to be planed away by the tips of the blades, wherein the tips of the blades are configured to be disintegrated by the inside wall of the retention casing in an event of an impact following an appearance of an unbalance that has led to the bearing being decoupled, to obtain a clearance J>E as required for operation of the decoupler.
 8. A turbojet according to claim 7, wherein the blades include, close to their tips, respective zones of weakness that are strong enough to enable the tips of the blades to plane away the abradable material of the retention casing, and weak enough to break on appearance of violent contact between the tips of the blades and the inside wall of the retention casing.
 9. A turbojet according to claim 8, wherein each zone of weakness is constituted by a groove formed parallel to the tip in one of faces of each blade in a base material constituting the blade, the groove being filled with resin to provide aerodynamic continuity for the face.
 10. A turbojet according to claim 9, wherein the groove is formed in a suction side face of the blade.
 11. A turbojet according to claim 7, wherein the inside wall of the retention casing presents substantially axial ribs to facilitate disintegration of the tips of the blades in the event of the unbalance and after the abradable material has been abraded away by the tips of the blades.
 12. A turbojet according to claim 8, wherein the inside wall of the retention casing presents substantially axial ribs to facilitate disintegration of the tips of the blades in the event of the unbalance and after the abradable material has been abraded away by the tips of the blades.
 13. A turbojet according to claim 9, wherein the inside wall of the retention casing presents substantially axial ribs to facilitate disintegration of the tips of the blades in the event of the unbalance and after the abradable material has been abraded away by the tips of the blades.
 14. A turbojet according to claim 10, wherein the inside wall of the retention casing presents substantially axial ribs to facilitate disintegration of the tips of the blades in the event of the unbalance and after the abradable material has been abraded away by the tips of the blades.
 15. A turbojet according to claim 7, wherein the clearance E is less than one-third of the clearance J.
 16. A turbojet according to claim 8, wherein the clearance E is less than one-third of the clearance J.
 17. A turbojet according to claim 9, wherein the clearance E is less than one-third of the clearance J.
 18. A turbojet according to claim 10, wherein the clearance E is less than one-third of the clearance J.
 19. A turbojet according to claim 11, wherein the clearance E is less than one-third of the clearance J.
 20. A turbojet according to claim 12, wherein the clearance E is less than one-third of the clearance J.
 21. A turbojet according to claim 13, wherein the clearance E is less than one-third of the clearance J.
 22. A turbojet according to claim 14, wherein the clearance E is less than one-third of the clearance J. 